THE NEW YORKER cane fields in the mid-nineteenth cen- tury, and now, ex.cept for a considerable number of busInessmen in Natal, a few traders in nearl} every Transvaal town, and the considerable number who are employed in hotels and restaurants, they seem to be occupied chiefly as venders of fruit, vegetables, and flowers. In our East Rand mining town, the Indian traders were concentrated in a huddle of shops in one block, bought by them before the passage of what is known as the Ghetto Act of 1 946, which, in ef- fect, bars them from owning or leas- ing property in any but restricted, non- European areas. These were tailor shops, or they were "bazaars" where cheap goods of all kinds were sold, and they were the object of dislike and enmity on the part of the white shop- keepers. In fact, a woman who w.as een coming out of an Indian ba7aar with a basket of groceries immediately earned herself a stigma: either she was low- class or, if her husband's position as an official of one of the gold mines put the level of her cldss beyond ques- tion, she must be stingy. "She's so mean she even goes to the Indians' " was the most convincing allegation of miserli- ness In our town. It was bad enough to be penny-pinching, but to stoop so 10\,\T as to buy from an Indian trader in order to save! For some reason I have never under- stood, it was quite respectable and con- ventional to buy your fruit and vege- tables from the Indians who hawked from door to door with their big red or y llow lorries Our household, lIke most others, had its own regular hawker, who called two or three times a week. Whatever a hawker's name (and it was always painted in large, elaborate let- tering, a kind of fancy compromise be- tween Indian and English script, on his lorry), he was in variably known as Sammy. He even called himself Sammy, rapping at kitchen doors and announc- 7 \ j ,,, , <I' . tilila ii .W i j I __ 4f' , \ þ' . - - .- ( I .. ."'" \ WI od' - .;- '- \ . , ì " e \(-1 '.. 141 ":!!:.> makes every picture Cracking sharp v.,.) o 1 st '"M >, ,. .. t 1w 1;!!JZ. /2/? ^ ft.<- " ; , . , . ... ! ..> In all your pictures, vivid new spar- kle, snap and clarity of detail come like "second nature" with the auto- matic shooting ease of the brilliant, all-new Omega 120. Like no other camera, it's mechan- ically designed to carry the supreme resolving power of a great new cus- tom lens right through to the finished print . . . with remarkable new fea- tures like its magnifying rangefinder for pinpoint focusing, its synchron- ized film pressure plate for unfailing picture sharpness. And its unique Touch System operation even includes automatic flash-bulb "feeding." Let your photo dealer tell you all. . . <<-: . ... :. i^,.ø.,..:þ^. ..::..... . ^,ø <<: . f'j-. 1:," ÿ... if' /^' { '. -;t-.. ;. ?:.Æ " '.1. :::;: "-ÿ. . ''i', . .,.".'" . 1t i.."R- ;'.: .' y' .. ".. .'.r.... &>. .^ .;. 'z: .<,0)' .. '.' . oJ!' 4'" .y' QUICK LUNCH Omega 120 photo by Rudolph Simmon THE ALL-NE\N ... Made in U. S. A. makes sharper For free folder wrlte Dept NY-IO SIMMON BROS., INC. pictures sure and simple A Makers of famous Omega and Automega enlargers om.,. @ 30-28 Starr Ave., Long Island City 1, N. Y. Number 2 Pall Mall, London, In 1749 saw the beginning of a new enterprise. It was the celebrated English wine and spirits house of J usterini & Brooks. Today, as indeed for over two centuries past, Justerini & Brooks is renowned for uncompromising quality. Try the famous Rare J & B Scotch, of flavour unsurpassed. EE] \>eX'fI\es more in cost 'Nor Ids apart in qua\it & Imported by THE PADDJNGTON. CORPO ATI ON J 630 Fifth Avenue 1 New York 20 SCOTCH WHISKY 86 Proof Blended Scotch Whisky